Guest guest Posted October 14, 2004 Report Share Posted October 14, 2004 Another scare story... What it boils down to is that they just haven't a clue! Love, light and peace, Sue, mum to a 4'4 " , very slim 7yo who doesn't drink milk!!! " Learn from the mistakes of others--you can never live long enough to make them all yourself. " - Luther ------------------------------------------------ http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/story.jsp?story=571941 Girls who grow tall and thin face highest risk of breast cancer By nce Health Editor 14 October 2004 Tall, thin teenage girls who put on a growth spurt at puberty are at highest risk of breast cancer - and milk may be the culprit, researchers suggest today. Their shorter, chubbier sisters are at lower risk and remain so throughout their adult lives until they reach the menopause. The findings from a large Danish study of more than 117,000 women confirm that height is a risk factor for breast cancer and show that it is growth in childhood that has the greatest influence. The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, could help explain one of the greatest puzzles of breast cancer - why the disease has seen a global increase over the past 50 years. The answer may be that it is linked to the global increase in average heights, driven by changing diets. And the journal calls for more research into one possible dietary factor behind both trends: the consumption of milk. An increase in milk drinking has been suggested as a factor behind the large increase in average heights in Japan. As the Japanese adopted a more Western diet in the two decades after the Second World War, 12-year-old girls gained 15cm in height on average. That gain has been paralleled 30 years later by an increase in breast cancer in the same generation of women; the incidence has doubled from 40 to 80 cases per 100,000 of population. Writing in the journal, Karin Michels and Walter Willett of Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that milk may play an important role because it contains animal protein and a high level of anabolic hormones. " Recent findings have confirmed that milk consumption does increase the circulating levels of insulin-like growth factor 1 and is associated with higher stature. The task of understanding how these and other factors are related to childhood growth and to the risk of breast cancer will not be an easy task but it is one that deserves serious attention, " they said. The Danish study, from the Epidemiology Science Centre in Copenhagen, shows that the speed of growth between the ages of eight and 14 has the greatest influence on the risk of breast cancer in adult life. The findings show that those whose peak year of growth occurred between the ages of 13 and 14 had a 16 per cent lower risk of breast cancer than those whose peak growth occurred earlier, between 10 and 11. Girls who were tallest by the age of 14 had the highest risk. The researchers also found that girls who were overweight at puberty had a lower risk of breast cancer. Understanding the biological mechanisms underlying these changes will be crucial to preventing breast cancer, the researchers said. The findings, together with other research, suggest that the breast may be vulnerable to carcinogenic influences during rapid growth at puberty. The researchers said that calculating the best body build to avoid breast cancer was complex. " One would want to be born light, to grow slowly but steadily into a stubby, short child and to maintain one's fat mass until one reached menopause, at which point one would want to shed the excess pounds immediately, " they said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 2004 Report Share Posted October 14, 2004 Regarding the clip below. Good grief----- can you hear me laughing, my listmates in Europe and beyond, all the way across the ocean?? This research is funded I guess to divert attention away from all the environmental toxics that we are being subjected to " without our consent. " We are all particpating in a huge worldwide chemistry experiment. On the other hand, since I am the shortest one in my family and have been a little chubby throughout my 40 years, I guess I should be feeling reassured. Hah! I guess it could be that us chubby ones are able to store the toxics away in our fat where less damage is done. Guess I will give up trying to lose this 20 pounds (pretty much have anyway). The researchers said that calculating the best body build to avoid breast cancer was complex. " One would want to be born light, to grow slowly but steadily into a stubby, short child and to maintain one's fat mass until one reached menopause, at which point one would want to shed the excess pounds immediately, " they said. OT - Girls who grow tall and thin face highest risk of breast cancer > > Another scare story... What it boils down to is that they just haven't a > clue! > > Love, light and peace, > > Sue, mum to a 4'4 " , very slim 7yo who doesn't drink milk!!! > > " Learn from the mistakes of others--you can never live long enough to make > them all yourself. " - Luther > > ------------------------------------------------ > > http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/story.jsp?story=571941 > > Girls who grow tall and thin face highest risk of breast cancer > By nce Health Editor > 14 October 2004 > > > Tall, thin teenage girls who put on a growth spurt at puberty are at highest > risk of breast cancer - and milk may be the culprit, researchers suggest > today. > > Their shorter, chubbier sisters are at lower risk and remain so throughout > their adult lives until they reach the menopause. > > The findings from a large Danish study of more than 117,000 women confirm > that height is a risk factor for breast cancer and show that it is growth in > childhood that has the greatest influence. > > The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, could help > explain one of the greatest puzzles of breast cancer - why the disease has > seen a global increase over the past 50 years. > > The answer may be that it is linked to the global increase in average > heights, driven by changing diets. And the journal calls for more research > into one possible dietary factor behind both trends: the consumption of > milk. > > An increase in milk drinking has been suggested as a factor behind the large > increase in average heights in Japan. As the Japanese adopted a more Western > diet in the two decades after the Second World War, 12-year-old girls gained > 15cm in height on average. > > That gain has been paralleled 30 years later by an increase in breast cancer > in the same generation of women; the incidence has doubled from 40 to 80 > cases per 100,000 of population. Writing in the journal, Karin Michels and > Walter Willett of Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that milk may play an > important role because it contains animal protein and a high level of > anabolic hormones. " Recent findings have confirmed that milk consumption > does increase the circulating levels of insulin-like growth factor 1 and is > associated with higher stature. The task of understanding how these and > other factors are related to childhood growth and to the risk of breast > cancer will not be an easy task but it is one that deserves serious > attention, " they said. > > The Danish study, from the Epidemiology Science Centre in Copenhagen, shows > that the speed of growth between the ages of eight and 14 has the greatest > influence on the risk of breast cancer in adult life. > > The findings show that those whose peak year of growth occurred between the > ages of 13 and 14 had a 16 per cent lower risk of breast cancer than those > whose peak growth occurred earlier, between 10 and 11. Girls who were > tallest by the age of 14 had the highest risk. > > The researchers also found that girls who were overweight at puberty had a > lower risk of breast cancer. Understanding the biological mechanisms > underlying these changes will be crucial to preventing breast cancer, the > researchers said. The findings, together with other research, suggest that > the breast may be vulnerable to carcinogenic influences during rapid growth > at puberty. > > The researchers said that calculating the best body build to avoid breast > cancer was complex. " One would want to be born light, to grow slowly but > steadily into a stubby, short child and to maintain one's fat mass until one > reached menopause, at which point one would want to shed the excess pounds > immediately, " they said. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 2004 Report Share Posted October 14, 2004 Although i dont drink milk, and think it has problems, i probably would think that statement unlikely to expalin things, and how pointless is it to talk of the best body to have? like we have much choice in our genes. Heights have been rising for more than 50 years as have diets changing. Higher risk doesn't mean that's even why you get it at all. You'd need a whole page for carcenogen causing materials. They haven't much of a clue how to stop it, whats causing it, but that doesnt stop them talking about they're wonderful findings. We've just found out our new house is in a radon area so I'm not impressed with that really. :| A In Vaccinations , " Mum2mishka " <mum2mishka@t...> wrote: > Another scare story... What it boils down to is that they just haven't a > clue! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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